4.6 Article

Attentional bias to food during free and instructed viewing in anorexia nervosa: An eye tracking study

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 164, Issue -, Pages 468-476

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2023.06.039

Keywords

Anorexia nervosa; Eye tracking; Attentional bias; Food

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Previous research on anorexia nervosa (AN) has found that patients exhibit an attentional bias towards food, but the results are inconclusive due to conceptual differences and the use of different paradigms. This study used an eye-tracking paradigm to investigate biases in individuals with AN compared to healthy controls. The results showed that AN patients had lower fixation frequency and spent less time fixating on food stimuli during free viewing, but there were no differences in initial orientation or engagement/disengagement to food stimuli during instructed viewing. These findings suggest that AN patients initially avoid attention towards food, which could potentially serve as a marker for the disorder.
Previous research has shown that patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) show an attentional bias to food. How-ever, due to different conceptualizations of attentional bias and the use of various paradigms, results are inconclusive and more precise insights into the exact nature of this attentional bias are needed. Therefore, an eye-tracking paradigm with food (low and high caloric) and non-food (objects) pictures was used to investigate biases in AN patients (n = 25) compared to healthy controls (n = 22). Several indices of visual attention were examined, both during free (initial orientation, fixation frequency, fixation time) and explicitly instructed (engagement, disengagement) viewing. Our results during the free viewing phase indicated that AN patients (as compared to healthy matched controls) looked less frequently and spent less time fixating on food stimuli, compared to the comparison group. No differences between both groups (n = 47) in initial orientation could be observed. Interestingly, during the instructed viewing phase, no differences between the patient and the com-parison group were observed in engagement or disengagement to food stimuli. These results suggest an (initial) attentional avoidance of food in AN patients when closely investigating spontaneous attentional processes, while this could not be observed during gaze behaviour when receiving clear instructions. Hence, future research should look into how attentional bias during spontaneous gaze patterns could serve as a potential marker of AN, and how targeting this bias could be applied in treatment interventions.

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